Full instructions for using this Rent and Mesne Profits Calculator, and important legal notices, are further down this page.
Method of calculation:
The answers above include the instalment of rent due on your chosen starting date
(step 1 above) and also any instalment of rent which may fall due on your chosen ending
date (step 2 above). The continuing daily rate is calculated by taking the equivalent annual
amount of rent and dividing by 365, except in the case of rent due weekly where it is
calculated by dividing the weekly instalment of rent by 7. It makes no difference to the
calculation itself whether rent is payable in advance or in arrears, although you should
bear in mind that where the rent is payable in arrears you will need to use the continuing
daily rate if you wish to calculate the total sum due to the present day since the last
instalment of rent fell due.
Problem dates:
(1) Where the starting date exists in the starting month but not in the ending month (e.g. a
calculation from 31 January to 30 September), then for the purpose of monthly and six
monthly calculations the calculator assumes that another full month has accrued if the
ending date is the last day of the ending month. So, for example, 31 January to 30
April is four instalments of monthly rent (i.e. it includes the April instalment) but 31
January to 29 April is only three instalments of monthly rent (i.e. it excludes the April
instalment).
(2) No equivalent correction is needed or made when the calculation goes from a shorter
month to a longer one. So, for example, 30 April to 30 May is two instalments of monthly
rent (i.e. it includes the May instalment) regardless of the fact that other days still remain
in May.
(3) The above points take account of leap years. In other words, the last day of
February for these purposes is normally the 28th but in a leap year would be the 29th.
(4) An equivalent problem occurs in respect of annual calculations but only when the
date of the first missed instalment is 29 February (an unlikely scenario). In these
circumstances the calculator assumes that another full year from 29 February has
accrued if the ending date is 28 February in a normal year or 29 February in a leap year.
(5) Again, no correction is made if the first missed annual instalment is 28 February. In
other words, the annual instalments would always be treated as falling due on 28 February
regardless of whether the ending year is a leap year or not.
Year 2000 compliance:
This calculator is year 2000 compliant, assuming that the system on which it is used is also
year 2000 compliant. In other words, it works for dates before, after, in, and spanning, the
year 2000.
Browser compatibility:
This calculator is designed for use with Microsoft Internet Explorer version 4.0 and above, or
Netscape Navigator version 4.06 and above. Earlier versions of these browsers may work but
their compatibility may be limited or non-existent. Please note in any event that Netscape
browsers earlier than Netscape Navigator 4.06 do not permit dates earlier than 1st January
1970. This page is best viewed at a resolution of
800 x 600 or higher.
© 2002-2005. Copyright in this calculator vests in the Head of Chambers for the time being of New Square Chambers, aside from much of the code for the popup date selection routines, for which we are grateful to the excellent irt.org library. Insofar as the irt.org code has been modified for use in this calculator, the modified code is © the Head of Chambers for the time being of New Square Chambers.
However, this calculator is freeware and may be used on this website without charge for any commercial or non-commercial purpose.
If you have any comments (whether good or bad) on this calculator or if you spot any errors, New Square Chambers would be only too pleased to hear about them. Please e-mail us. Thank you.
Dating by reference to festivals was common in mediaeval times. See, for example, C.R. Cheney (ed.), Handbook of Dates for Students of English History, Royal Historical Society, 1945, page 40:
Even within surviving law reports, there are reported cases going back to the beginning of the seventeenth century in which the usual quarter days are referred to as being "usual" (see, for example, Wm. Clun's Case, 10 Co. Rep. 126b).
The Annunciation (25th March) used to be the first day of the year before the reformation of the English calendar by the Calendar (New Style) Act 1750. With the start of the new year being a natural choice for the payment of rent, it is likely that the other festivals became usual merely because they were at convenient intervals of roughly one quarter each.
The English calendar was fundamentally restructured by the Calendar (New Style) Act 1750, 24 George 2, c. 23 (as amended by the Calendar Act 1751, 25 George 2, c. 30). The 1750 Act was entitled "An Act for regulating the Commencement of the Year, and for correcting the Calendar now in Use". Section I of that Act provided that:
Section VI of that Act went on to provide:
The old practice was therefore preserved in spite of the calendar being altered so that the first day of the year was now 1st January rather than 25th March. This practice has persisted to date so that even many twenty-first century commercial leases are drafted so that rent is payable on the usual quarter days. Some other jurisdictions, including Scotland, have altered the usual quarter days by statute so that they fall on days which appear more sensible and memorable to modern minds, but no such thing has been done in England.
© Head of Chambers of
New Square Chambers.
SCA - 19th April 2002 to 3rd April 2005.